spepp reviewed Tin Man by Sarah Winman
Review of 'Tin Man'
2 stars
Messy. I can't even call this "over described" because it doesn't really describe much, it just dumps street names at you hoping it sticks. The whole "June 1990, France" chapter feels like the epithome of the "Going to France? Learn everything in hindsight (they hate tourists)" talk, because one thing is giving me context, the other is just giving me meaningless french words for 40 pages expecting that I'm aware of every single corner in France. The plot itself is loose, it's divided into two parts that felt that should develop together. That doesn't happen and we just get two points of view that sometimes converge through repetition ("Remember when X did that?", "Remember when I, X, did that?"). And of course, all of that could've worked really well either way, a lot of books do these things!, so what went wrong? Too many themes, not enough time …
Messy. I can't even call this "over described" because it doesn't really describe much, it just dumps street names at you hoping it sticks. The whole "June 1990, France" chapter feels like the epithome of the "Going to France? Learn everything in hindsight (they hate tourists)" talk, because one thing is giving me context, the other is just giving me meaningless french words for 40 pages expecting that I'm aware of every single corner in France. The plot itself is loose, it's divided into two parts that felt that should develop together. That doesn't happen and we just get two points of view that sometimes converge through repetition ("Remember when X did that?", "Remember when I, X, did that?"). And of course, all of that could've worked really well either way, a lot of books do these things!, so what went wrong? Too many themes, not enough time to deal with any of them, I think. I know exactly what Sarah was trying to do but that's nothing if the narrative itself doesn't convince me of such: a lot of things happened and I didn't feel a single thing.